| Literature DB >> 24024167 |
Sarah J Chapple1, Xinghua Cheng, Giovanni E Mann.
Abstract
4-hydroxynonenal (HNE) is a lipid hydroperoxide end product formed from the oxidation of n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids. The relative abundance of HNE within the vasculature is dependent not only on the rate of lipid peroxidation and HNE synthesis but also on the removal of HNE adducts by phase II metabolic pathways such as glutathione-S-transferases. Depending on its relative concentration, HNE can induce a range of hormetic effects in vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells, including kinase activation, proliferation, induction of phase II enzymes and in high doses inactivation of enzymatic processes and apoptosis. HNE also plays an important role in the pathogenesis of vascular diseases such as atherosclerosis, diabetes, neurodegenerative disorders and in utero diseases such as pre-eclampsia. This review examines the known production, metabolism and consequences of HNE synthesis within vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells, highlighting alterations in mitochondrial and endoplasmic reticulum function and their association with various vascular pathologies.Entities:
Keywords: 15d-PGJ2, 15-deoxy-Delta (12,14) prostaglandin-J2; 4-hydroxynonenal; AP-1, Activator protein-1; AR, Aldose reductase; ARE, Antioxidant response element; ATF6, Activating transcription factor 6; Akt, Protein kinase B; BAEC, Bovine aortic endothelial cells; BH4, Tetrahydrobiopterin; BLMVEC, Bovine lung microvascular vein endothelial cells; BPAEC, Bovine pulmonary arterial endothelial cells; BTB, Broad complex Tramtrack and Bric–brac domain; CHOP, C/EBP-homologous protein; CREB, cAMP response element-binding protein; EGFR, Epidermal growth factor receptor; ER, Endoplasmic reticulum; ERAD, Endoplasmic reticulum assisted degradation; ERK1/2, Extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2; Elk1, ETS domain-containing protein; Endothelial cells; EpRE, Electrophile response element; FAK, Focal adhesion kinase; FAP, Familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy; GCLC, Glutamate cysteine ligase catalytic subunit; GCLM, Glutamate cysteine ligase modifier subunit; GS-DHN, Glutathionyl-1,4 dihydroxynonene; GS-HNE, HNE-conjugates; GSH, Glutathione; GST, Glutathione-S-transferase; GTPCH, Guanosine triphosphate cyclohydrolase I; HASMC, Human aortic smooth muscle cells; HCSMC, Human coronary smooth muscle cells; HERP, Homocysteine inducible ER protein; HMEC, Human microvascular endothelial cells; HNE, 4-hydroxynonenal; HO-1, Heme oxygenase-1; HUVEC, Human umbilical vein endothelial cells; Hsp-70/72/90, Heat shock proteins-70/ -72/ -90; IRE1, Inositol requiring enzyme 1 IRE1; IVR, Central intervening region; JNK, c-jun N-terminal kinase; Keap1, Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1; MASMC, Mouse aortic smooth muscle cells; MEK1/2, Mitogen activated protein kinase kinase 1/2; MMP-1/2, Matrix metalloproteinase-1/ -2; MPEC, Mouse pancreatic islet endothelial cells; NAC, N-acetylcysteine; NFκB, Nuclear factor kappa B; NO, Nitric oxide; NQO1, NAD(P)H quinone oxidoreductase; Nrf2; Nrf2, Nuclear factor-E2-related factor 2; PCEC, Porcine cerebral endothelial cells; PDGF, Platelet-derived growth factor; PDI, Protein disulfide isomerases; PERK, Protein kinase-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase; PKC, Protein kinase C; PUFAs, Polyunsaturated fatty acids; RASMC, Rat aortic smooth muscle cells; ROS, Reactive oxygen species; RVSMC, Rat vascular smooth muscle cells; Redox signaling; SMC, Smooth muscle cell; TKR, Tyrosine kinase receptor; UPR, Unfolded protein response; Vascular biology; Vascular smooth muscle cells; eNOS, Endothelial nitric oxide synthase; elF2α, Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2α; iNOS, Inducible nitric oxide synthase; oxLDL, Oxidized low density lipoprotein; tBHP, Tert-butylhydroperoxide; xCT, cystine/glutamate amino acid transporter
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24024167 PMCID: PMC3757694 DOI: 10.1016/j.redox.2013.04.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Redox Biol ISSN: 2213-2317 Impact factor: 11.799
Fig. 1Hormetic modulation of vascular cell function in response to HNE. Whilst low physiological levels of HNE can directly target specific cellular pathways such as tyrosine kinase receptor (TKR) activation and downstream kinase signaling, exerting positive effects on cell function such as cell proliferation, progressively increasing concentrations of HNE can be detrimental. Adaptive responses in phase II metabolism largely through activation of the redox-sensitive Nrf2 serve to neutralize HNE protein adduction and have a potential role in preventing off-target effects of HNE, prolonged organelle stress and loss of function. Chronic exposure to pathological concentrations of HNE found in disease states or which may accumulate in discrete cellular regions or organelles are associated with cellular stress and dysfunction, characterized by loss of function of enzymatic systems, cellular damage and activation of pro-inflammatory and ultimately pro-apoptotic signaling.
Effects of HNE on vascular smooth muscle cells.
| RTK, MAPK and PI3K/Akt activation | ||||
| MASMC | 0.1 | 10–90 min | In young but not aged animals↑p∼ERK1/2,↔p∼p38, p∼Jnk | |
| RASMC | 1 | 5 min | ↑p∼ERK1/2 | |
| HCSMC | 10 | 10 min | ↑p∼PDGFR, ↑p∼ERK1/2 | |
| MASMC | 1 | 5–120 min | ↑p∼ERK1/2 that was maximal within 60 min,↑p∼p38 maximal within 30 min and p∼JNK reduced after 30 min of HNE treatment | |
| RASMC | 1 | 5–120 min | Dose-dependent↑Akt activity | |
| RASMC | 1 | 4 h | ↑PKC activation, abolished by AR inhibition | |
| Proliferation | ||||
| RASMC | 0.1–1 | 12–24 h | Dose-dependent↑MMP-2 activity, mRNA and protein expression, which was dependent on Akt activation | |
| MASMC | 1 | 24 h | ↑MMP-2 expression and activity which was dependent on HNE-induced ERK activation | |
| MASMC | 0.1–10 | 24 h | 0.1 µM HNE ↑cell density in cells from young but not aged mice,↑ERK1/2 activation and downstream cyclin D1 mRNA expression. Higher doses 1–10 µM HNE↓cell density | |
| 0.1 µM HNE ↑cell survival in cells from young but not aged mice. Aged cells showed↑ROS generation in response to HNE, with NAC↑survival in aged cell populations | ||||
| RASMC | 0.1–10 | 24 h | HNE and HNE conjugates (e.g. GS-HNE) <1 µM↑cell proliferation, with higher doses↓cell density. Aldose reductase activity required for cell survival/proliferation. Inhibition of HNE conjugate removal by RLIP76 transporter↑cell growth | |
| HCSMC | 2–20 | 24 h | Dose-dependent ↑MMP-1 requiring HNE-induced PDGFR and downstream ERK1/2 activation | |
| RASMC | 1 | 48–72 h | ↑Cell proliferation, attenuated by growth factor PDGF receptor autoantibodies | |
| RASMC | 2.5 | 48 h | ↑Proliferation | |
| HASMC | 2.5 | 72 h | ↑Cell proliferation, dependent on aldose reductase activity | |
| Transcriptional activity | ||||
| HASMC | 1 | 0.5–6 h | 30 min following HNE exposure↑I | |
| RASMC | 1 | 4 h | ↑NF | |
| RASMC | 1 | 12 h | ↑NF | |
| RVSMC | 0–5 | 24 h | Dose-dependent ↓NF | |
| RASMC | 1–10 | 3 h | ↑Elk1, c-jun, CHOP and AP-1 activity, ↑c-jun and c-fos mRNA | |
| RASMC | 2.5 | 1–2 h | ↑c-fos and c-jun expression, ↑AP-1 DNA binding | |
| MASMC | 20 | 0–5 h | ↑Nrf2 nuclear accumulation and downstream HO-1, Prx1 and A170 mRNA, absent in cells derived from Nrf2 knockout mice | |
| Phase II metabolism | ||||
| HASMC | 0.05 | 30 min | ↑Aldose reductase metabolized GSH conjugates | |
| 2.5 | 8–12 h | ↑Aldose reductase mRNA (8 h) and protein (12 h) expression | ||
| RASMC | 1 | 5 min | ↓Cellular thiol content | |
| RVSMC | 5–10 | 0–24 h | ↑Aldose reductase mRNA (7 h), protein (12 h) and activity (12–24 h) | |
| RASMC | 0.1–10 | 24 h | HNE and HNE conjugates (e.g. GS-HNE) <1 µM↑cell proliferation, with higher doses↓cell density. Aldose reductase activity required for cell survival/proliferation. Inhibition of HNE conjugate removal by RLIP76 transporter↑cell growth | |
| Oxidative stress and protein adduct clearance | ||||
| HASMC | 1 | 0–12 h | ↑8-isoprostane induced following 9 h HNE treatment | |
| RASMC | 50 | 30 min | ↑Autophagy but not proteasomal HNE degradation | |
| RVSMC | 50 | 4 h | ↓LPS/IFN induced proteasomal IƙBα degradation | |
| RBASMC | 0–3000 | 4.5 h | ↓Recognition and clearance of LDL with increasing [HNE] | |
| Cellular dysfunction | ||||
| PBMS | 10–100 | 0 min | ↓Carbachol induced relaxation | |
| RVSMC | 0–5 | 24 h | HNE dose-dependently (0–5 µM) ↓LPS/IFN induced nitrite production, with doses >12.5 µM↓iNOS expression | |
| Mitochondria | ||||
| RASMC | 1–30 | 10–60 min | HNE dose-dependently↑ROS production measured by DCF fluorescence with inhibitors of mitochondria abolishing HNE-induced superoxide generation | |
| RASMC | 1 | 30 min | ↑Mitochondria derived superoxide | |
| RASMC | 20 | 20–180 min | ↓Oxygen consumption rate (OCR),↔extracellular acidification rate (ECAR) | |
| Apoptosis | ||||
| RASMC | 1–30 | 24 h | HNE >10 µM↑apoptosis, with 30 µM HNE also increasing necrosis | |
| RVSMC | 5–15 | 6 h | HNE dose-dependently↑apoptosis, with AR inhibition↑HNE-induced apoptosis | |
| HASMC | 0–100 | 6 h | 100 µM HNE induced DNA fragmentation | |
Cell type abbreviations: HCSMC, human coronary smooth muscle cells; HASMC, Human aortic smooth muscle cells; RVMC, rat vascular smooth muscle cells; RASMC, rat aortic smooth muscle cells; RBASMC, rabbit aortic smooth muscle cells MASMC, mouse aortic smooth muscle cells; PBMS, pig bladder muscle strips.
Effects of HNE and 15d-PGJ2 on endothelial cells.
| Cell type | Treatment | Conc.⁎ (μmol/L) | Time | Main findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RTK and MAPK activation | |||||
| HEC | HNE | 0.1 | 3 h | HNE (0.1 µM) and oxLDL (200 µg/ml)↑EGFR activation | |
| oxLDL | |||||
| BLMVEC | HNE | 10–100 | 2 h | ↑Phosphorylation of ERK, JNK, p38 MAPK | |
| MPEC | HNE | 20 | 0–2 h | ↑p∼JNK within 30 min,↔p∼p38, p∼ERK1/2 | |
| BLMVEC | HNE | 25 | 30 min | ↑MAPK activation | |
| BPAEC | HNE | 50 | 30 min | ↑Phospholipase D activation via protein tyrosine phosphorylation | |
| HUVEC | 15d-PGJ2 | 10 | 2 h | ↑Phosphorylation of MAPK JNK (2 h) | |
| Transcriptional activity | |||||
| HUVEC | HNE | 5 | 12 h | ↑HO-1 and NQO1 via Nrf2, protects HUVEC from tBHP attack | |
| HUVEC | HNE | 1–10 | 12 h | ↔NFκB activation, ↓IL-8 and ICAM-1 production in a concentration dependent manner indicating ↓inflammatory responses | |
| HUVEC | 15d-PGJ2 | 2.5 | 2–8 h | ↑Nrf2 nuclear accumulation, ↑HO-1, ↑NQO1, ↑adducts with Keap1 at cysteines residues in IVR region, which may mediate shear induced Nrf2 activation | |
| BAEC | 15d-PGJ2 | 2 | 16 h | ↑GSH, HO-1, ↑Keap1 adduct formation | |
| HUVEC | 15d-PGJ2 | 5 | 24 h | ↑GSH, ↑GCLC, ↑GCLM, ↑resistance to oxidative stress which relies on | |
| Oxidative stress and protein adduct clearance | |||||
| BAEC | HNE | 5 | 1 h | Modifies thioredoxin-1 at cys-73 and ↓activity, ↑ROS, ↓GSH | |
| HAEC | HNE | 5 | 24 h | Protects HAEC from 6-hydroxydopamine induced cell death | |
| BAEC | HNE | 25 | 4 h | Proposed ↑proteasomal degradation of GTPCH and Hsp90 | |
| Cellular dysfunction | |||||
| BLMVEC | HNE | 10–100 | 2 h | ↑Endothelial permeability; ↑Michael adducts formation, actin fiber remodeling via phosphorylation of ERK, JNK, p38 MAPK | |
| BLMVEC | HNE | 25 | 30 min | Induces actin rearrangement, ↓GSH, ↑cell adhesion and surface integrins; ↓tyrosine phosphorylation of FAK,↑MAPK activation, ↑Michael adducts with ↑focal adhesion & adherens junctional proteins, reversed by pretreatment NAC | |
| BAEC | HNE | 5 | 1 h | ↑Monocyte adhesion | |
| BAEC | HNE | 10 | 5 d | ↑Membrane phospholipid perturbation, ↑prostacyclin, ↑monocyte migration | |
| BAEC | HNE | 10 | 6–8 h | ↓Junctional communication | |
| BAEC | HNE | 25 | 4 h | ↑ROS, ↓NO, GSH, ↑apoptosis involving caspase-3 activation which can be attenuated by BH4 supplementation. ↓BH4 by ↓GTPCH leading to ↑eNOS uncoupling, ↓HSP90 leading to ↓eNOS phosphorylation, proposed ↑proteasomal activity and proteasomal degradation of BH4 and HSP 90 | |
| Mitochondrial function | |||||
| BAEC | HNE | 5–10 | 4–16 h | ↑GSH and HO-1 at 16 h, ↑ROS from mitochondria after 4 h | |
| HUVEC | 15d-PGJ2 | 2.5 | 24 h | ↑GSH, ↑complex I activity in cell extracts, dependent on | |
| BAEC | 15d-PGJ2 | 10 | 16 h | ↑HO-1, ↓mitochondrial membrane potential ↑Nrf2 nuclear accumulation, blocked IBTP, a mitochondrial-targeted thiol reactive compound. | |
| ER stress | |||||
| HUVEC | HNE | 25 | 30 min – 2 h | ↑Protein adduction (HSP90, HSP70,PDI), ↑xBP-1 splicing, ↑PERK, p∼eIF2α, and ATF6 translocation; ↑Grp78 and HERP, ↑ICAM-1, cell adhesion, TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-8; activation of endothelial cells mediated by ↑ER stress, noting depletion of GSH cannot ↑ER stress | |
| HMEC | HNE | 20 | 24 h | ↑PERK and ATF6; ↑p∼IRE1 and p∼eIF2α; ↑ER stress, which is prevented by pretreatment with NAC | |
| HMEC | HNE/oxLDL | 0–25 (HNE)/ 200 µg/ml oxLDL | 14–18 h | Forms adducts with PDI,↓PDI activity and↓cell viability. ↑CHOP and xBP1s mRNA as indicators of ↑ER stress. Loss of PDI activity and reduced viability prevented by NAC. | |
| Apoptosis | |||||
| HUVEC | HNE | 10–50 | 3 h | ↑Cell death and ↓growth capacity but this effect is affected by serum in the medium | |
| HUVEC | HNE | 10 | 12 h | ↑Apoptosis, ↓protein synthesis | |
| PCEC | HNE | 1–50 | 3 h | ↑Chromosomal aberrations and micronuclei formation | |
| BAEC | HNE | 25 | 4 h | ↑ROS, ↓NO,↓GSH, ↑apoptosis involving caspase-3 activation which can be attenuated by BH4 supplementation. | |
| ↓BH4 resulting from ↓GTPCH and ↓HSP90 levels leads to ↑eNOS uncoupling and ↓eNOS phosphorylation. Proposed ↑proteasomal activity towards GTPCH and HSP 90 underlies impaired NO production | |||||
| MPEC | HNE | 40 | 8 h | ↑p∼JNK leading to ↑p53 and Bax expression and↑apoptosis. Abolished by GST4 overexpression | |
| HUVEC | 15d-PGJ2 | 10 | 2–16 h | ↑ROS (1 h), ↑phosphorylation of MAPK and JNK (2 h), ↑p53 expression and phosphorylation (8 h), ↑caspase associated apoptosis | |
Cell type abbreviations MPEC, mouse pancreatic islet endothelial cells; HEC human endothelial cell line CRL-1998; BAEC, bovine aortic endothelial cells; BLMVEC, Bovine lung microvascular vein endothelial cells; BPAEC, bovine pulmonary arterial endothelial cells; HMEC, human microvascular endothelial cells; HUVEC, human umbilical vein endothelial cells; PCEC, porcine cerebral endothelial cells.